Wednesday, May 18, 2011 - 9:44 PM
Since May is Zombie Awareness Month, I thought I would be worth noting a factual statement in Theories of International Politics and Zombies that will have to be changed in the revived revised edition of the book.
On pages 5-6 of the introduction, I wrote:
The government of Haiti has laws on the books to prevent the zombification of individuals. No great power has done the same in public—but one can only speculate what these governments are doing in private.
Well, not any more!! Via Instapundit, I see that the Center for Disease Control has finally gone public on its Public Health Matters Blog. Fox News' Joshua Rhett-Miller reports:
Are you prepared for the impending zombie invasion?Actually, had he interviewed a zombie expert, [Cough, cough!!--ed.] I'm sure the Fox News reporter would have learned that this is not all that surprising. Indeed, I found research on the political economy of disasters to be the most useful sources in researching Theories of International Politics and Zombies.That's the question posed by the Centers for Diseases Control and Prevention in a Monday blog posting gruesomely titled, "Preparedness 101: Zombie Apocalypse." And while it's no joke, CDC officials say it's all about emergency preparation.
"There are all kinds of emergencies out there that we can prepare for," the posting reads. "Take a zombie apocalypse for example. That's right, I said z-o-m-b-i-e a-p-o-c-a-l-y-p-s-e. You may laugh now, but when it happens you'll be happy you read this, and hey, maybe you'll even learn a thing or two about how to prepare for a real emergency."
The post, written by Assistant Surgeon General Ali Khan, instructs readers how to prepare for "flesh-eating zombies" much like how they appeared in Hollywood hits like "Night of the Living Dead" and video games like Resident Evil. Perhaps surprisingly, the same steps you'd take in preparation for an onslaught of ravenous monsters are similar to those suggested in advance of a hurricane or pandemic.
Never Fear – CDC is Ready
If zombies did start roaming the streets, CDC would conduct an investigation much like any other disease outbreak. CDC would provide technical assistance to cities, states, or international partners dealing with a zombie infestation. This assistance might include consultation, lab testing and analysis, patient management and care, tracking of contacts, and infection control (including isolation and quarantine). It’s likely that an investigation of this scenario would seek to accomplish several goals: determine the cause of the illness, the source of the infection/virus/toxin, learn how it is transmitted and how readily it is spread, how to break the cycle of transmission and thus prevent further cases, and how patients can best be treated. Not only would scientists be working to identify the cause and cure of the zombie outbreak, but CDC and other federal agencies would send medical teams and first responders to help those in affected areas (I will be volunteering the young nameless disease detectives for the field work). (emphasis added)
One could argue that the offer of international technical assistance would be consistent with the liberal paradigm, in which a robust counterzombie regime was created.
The question is, would other countries welcome the assistance? Would other countries suspect the CDC of being the very progenitor of the zombie pandemic? Would Pakistan protest if Seal Team Six was dispatched to a Karachi suburb to put down an initial zombie outbreak?
These are Very Deep Questions, and I, for one, encourage further research in this area. In the meantime, however, I would like to applaud the Assistant Surgeon General and the Center for Disease Control for joining the State of New York in thinking about the unthinkable.
Indeed, I would encourage even more CDC transparency. For example, the scenario that's sketched out that the final episode of the first season of The Walking Dead -- could that, um, you know, actually happen?
EXPLORE:INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS, HOMELAND SECURITY, INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS THEORY, NATURAL DISASTERS, ZOMBIES
How did you come to find out about zombie awareness month? Also, why does it get a month, most of these things only get a week or day.
Sigh, you mention the walking dead and everyone's mind goes to
mush...
Look, when we strip out all the fun and funky cinimeatography, what you have is an epidemic. Plain and simple, with transmission passed by bodily fluids.
To that end, there are already global protocols in place to deal with epidemics, and we get to see them in action every few years, with the most recent being the concern over various strains of flu.
Nations didn't sit around scratching their heads. Government's didn't moan and wail about previous experiences and bush wars (Sorry Dan and Max), but institutions already in place, the WHO, the CDC, etc., which already have teams of doctors standing by, swung into action, to isolate, trace, and analyze the potential illness.
Yes, to Romero and now Brooks fans, the idea of the shambling undead is very romantic. But the reality is, this is an illness that is spread one person at a time, quite similar to the HIV-virus. The two differences we face here, are one, the theoretical speed of infection (near instantaneously) and rapid deterioration and succumbing to the disease.
But we live in a world where this already exists. Smallpox, Ebola, and MSRP were (in the case of smallpox) or are all already out in the environment, and once infected, run their course rapidly. Realize that Smallpox killed an estimated 500-million people during the course of the last century alone. That's rampant by any standards.
Perhaps the key difference with zombies is the mobility factor, that those who succumbed now, rather than fall by the wayside, continue to act as carriers.
But the sad and banal truth is, just as there are real and valid ways, today, to deal with medical epidemics, so too, would there be real means of countering a zombie plague.
Sorry to burst the bubble.
Of course, if you really want some out of the world solution, I would suggest rather than pushing the idea of the impact on international relations, just let the gamers and fanboys have at them. WoW players are pretty resourceful in the face of the walking dead and probably have better ideas than your typical international UN diplomat or NGO elite.
Oh, and one more thought to prick the bubble of the unstoppable
undead.
To quote the eminent engineer Montgomery Scott, "You cann'a change the laws of physics".
To that I'll add my old economics professor's key quote on the subject "There's no free lunch".
Simply put, it takes energy to move matter. Either internally generated energy or energy from an outside source.
A body, whether it is living or 'undead', requires energy for all of its actions. Which means that absent regular sources of fuel, a zombie will burn up the store of energy in its own body relatively quickly.
Do a rough calorie burn rate for non-stop walking, and figure a zombie could burn through its internal energy pretty quickly. No energy, no motion, no motion, no endless hordes of shambling undead.
The truth is
1,000 soldiers trashed Fela Kuti's house and they killed to his mothers.
by this:
''Zombies no go go, unless you tell am to go. Zombies no go think, unless you tell am to think...''
The Nigerian singer compared the foot soldiers of his country's military regime in the 1970s to zombies, shells of dead human beings without minds of their own.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iBgewcFh-cg
The world's 23 worst dictators and Failed states http://goo.gl/iInQq
Daniel W. Drezner is professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University.
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